‘So, Ray was probably a proxy for Vincent Loh Han,’ said Sammy as if speaking to a child. ‘Ray Hu was the money man for the Loh Han Tong.’
Mac sat at a picnic table overlooking the Srepok, the tributary river that met the Mekong at Stung Treng. Irish and Scots backpackers lay around on a blanket getting hammered on beer in the midday heat while the fishermen and boat people cruised up and down the brown river, hiding from the sun under their conical hats.
The phone call with Jen had been quick and unhelpfuclass="underline" the river boat Mac had pulled Lance and Urquhart off had been found downriver, abandoned: no kids, no clues. Jen had hauled in from Jakarta the old FBI/AFP crew, which she was no longer part of. Those women would usually interact with the local cops to rescue the children, and Jen would go to war with some ambassador or police chief about how they were obstructing an investigation, and then the sniggers about the Dyke Squad would start again.
‘Your friends come all this way to drink alcohol and be sick?’ said the low voice.
Captain Loan walked past him and sat on the other side of the table. She was wearing a sun hat.
‘Not my friends,’ said Mac. ‘When you’re Irish, every day out of your country is a cause to celebrate.’
A roar of laughter and swearing went up as a man and a woman attempted to drag an unconscious bloke into the river. His pants were falling down and one of the women yelled, ‘My God, John — but you’re huge.’
Mac got straight to it. ‘You wanted to talk?’
‘Yes,’ said Loan.
‘I’ll go first,’ said Mac. ‘How’s Tranh?’
‘He’s good, Mr Richard,’ said Loan. ‘Got a shot hand.’
‘I thought he was dead.’
‘So did I,’ said Loan. ‘But he’s okay — he asked after you.’
‘He could have called,’ said Mac, annoyed.
‘He was staying uninvolved. It wasn’t his idea.’
Loan opened a water bottle and sipped from it. She was nervous, as if wanting to say something but unable to bring herself to.
‘Suppose you want to know what kind of books I sell?’ said Mac.
Loan laughed. ‘We are past that, I think. I am going to ask you an unconventional favour.’
‘Yes?’ said Mac.
‘I have avoided my family business all my life — my father broke away before I was born and he wanted me to at least have the education so I could be a good citizen of the world.’ She said it with no irony.
‘You’ve achieved that, Captain.’
‘But the intelligence arm of my organisation has brought some matters to my attention,’ she said. ‘To do with this Joel Dozsa and his associations with foreign generals.’
Mac stiffened. Was she trying to bring him in? Hand him over to Vietnamese intel? Casually glancing up and down the riverfront park, he looked for white vans and people reading tourist maps.
‘I don’t mean like that,’ said Loan. ‘It’s not appropriate for me to become involved in this — I can’t be a police officer and speak for my family.’
‘I see. What can I do?’
‘I would like you to speak to someone.’
‘Someone?’ said Mac.
‘Someone who could resolve this Dozsa matter and perhaps help you stop larger political problems.’
As they stared at one another, Mac wondered who would break first. He wasn’t about to offer a thing — this woman had stood off for two weeks, because it suited her. She still held enormous power over him.
Mac broke. ‘Who is this someone?’
‘My uncle,’ she said, clearing her throat. ‘Vincent Loh Han.’
‘He asked you this?’ said Mac, shocked.
‘Yes, Mr Richard — he has a plane waiting at the airport.’
Screeching tyres woke Mac as they landed at Tan Son Nhat Airport in Saigon. The crisp air-conditioning of the Citation corporate jet gave way to waves of heat and humidity as he descended the stairs and was ushered by two heavies into a silver GMC Yukon.
Sitting in the back, Mac watched CNN on the in-car TV feed, mounted in the back of the seat in front. The headline news from the CNN Asia desk was the flurry of last-minute diplomatic and military talks between Japan and North Korea as the communist nation prepared to do its annual testing.
There were pictures of a Japanese admiral and a North Korean general sitting in armchairs beside one another; there were Asian guys in suits disappearing into ornate rooms; there were Asian men in suits thumping lecterns and pretending to pull out their own hair, which could mean only one thing: Japan’s Diet.
Televised maps showed two routes for the ICBMs — missiles that left Earth’s atmosphere and plunged down on a predetermined target at mach 10. One route flew over the Sea of Japan and then almost over Tokyo itself, dropping its booster rockets along the way before falling in the North Pacific. The other route flew south-east, over Okinawa, landing in the South Pacific. Either way, they flew over Japanese soil — although the Koreans would probably avoid Okinawa given the fact the US had a large military base on the island.
The tests were deliberate provocations of the Japanese, which the country was tearing itself apart over: ultranationalism was as alive in Japan as it was in China, and Japanese nationalists were waiting for their own excuse to drop the self-defence force and resurrect it into the most powerful military in the Western Pacific.
The report showed the Chinese and Americans trying to broker an agreement, but the Japanese and North Koreans weren’t bending. The China — Japan — Korea argument was old and deep, and the onset of the Cold War had merely papered over a significant conflict that pulled together racial, political, economic and territorial claims in one festering boil.
An analyst from a Washington-based institute was interviewed by the anchor: he said one of the worst things that could happen in the Asian region was China and Japan being lured into a military dispute over Korea. The regional disruption, not to mention the economic damage, would hurt the entire Western Pacific, which relied on the super-economies of China, Japan and Korea.
After fifteen minutes of driving through Saturday crowds, the Yukon was ushered into a private space behind an enormous grand- stand. The heavies stood around the door, looking for threats, as Mac was beckoned out of the back seat.
A goon frisked him at a small entry door — even though he’d been thoroughly searched before getting on the plane — and then Mac and the bodyguards walked through a series of hallways, up several flights of stairs, and through a door. The roar of the crowds exploded into Mac’s head and he blinked at the sudden blast of light. There were thousands of people around the brown circuit of the Phu Tho race track in western Saigon.
In the middle of the grandstand, roped off from the crowds, sat several people, spaced around a single man in a sand-coloured suit and sky-blue shirt.
Leading Mac into the enclosure, the heavies walked respectfully up to the man and waited for him to stop talking to an aide, who scribbled down the man’s bets and then left with bricks of money.
The larger of the heavies leaned into the man’s ear and the second heavy gestured for Mac to step forwards and take a seat. Sitting, Mac turned to the round-faced Asian man, who shooed away the heavies and called a waiter.
‘Vincent Loh Han,’ he said, all smiles and Singapore dental work.
‘G’day,’ said Mac, shaking hands.
‘Would you like a drink, Richard?’ said Loh Han in good English. ‘Or should I call you Alan?’
Chapter 63
Vincent Loh Han started with the history of the Saigon Racing Club and then explained why he attended the Magic Millions sales on the Gold Coast each year.
‘There’s only one legal horse-racing track in Vietnam,’ said the gangster. ‘So the Asian trainer don’t concentrate on Saigon — we get the tired or the spelled horse from Thailand, Malaysia, Hong Kong. They either building up, or they on the way down.’